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Primer on Chiefs and Chiefdoms [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 186 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 224x150x12 mm, weight: 290 g, illus.
  • Serija: Principles of Archaeology
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Jul-2021
  • Leidėjas: Eliot Werner Publications Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1734281839
  • ISBN-13: 9781734281835
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 186 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 224x150x12 mm, weight: 290 g, illus.
  • Serija: Principles of Archaeology
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Jul-2021
  • Leidėjas: Eliot Werner Publications Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1734281839
  • ISBN-13: 9781734281835
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Anthropological archaeology is well suited to pursue the study of chiefs, their leadership institutions (chiefdoms), and long-term historical processes. In this book Timothy Earle argues that studying chiefdoms is essential to understanding the role of elemental powers in social evolution. He studies chiefs and their power strategies, using as illustrations historically independent prehistoric and traditional societies; he discusses how chiefs continue to exist as powerful actors within modern states.

Chiefs are political operatives who hold titles of leadership over groups larger than intimate kin-based communities; although they rule with the consent of their group, they are all about building personal power and respect. Many scholars have viewed chiefs as problem solvers: defending groups against aggressors, resolving disputes, providing support under hardship, organizing labour for community projects, and redistributing goods among those in need. Chiefs do these things, but much of what they do is to accumulate benefits for themselves, staying in power and legitimizing control.

Recenzijos

Earle expertly summarizes a career's worth of knowledge on the political and economic underpinnings of early complex societies. . . . as a primer on current social evolutionary thinking it is a highly accessible volume for interested scholars working in California, North America, and beyond. --Mikael Fauvelle, Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology | Vol. 41, No. 2 (2021)

Given the scope and depth of Earle's work, this book can justifiably be described as a tour de force . . . Earle's comprehensive and well-researched work should be considered essential reading for those interested in understanding the processes that resulted in the advent of chiefdoms around the world."                          --Richard J. Chacon, Winthrop University, Latin American Antiquity, vol. 32, no. 4, 2021

1 Chiefdom Ethnographies of Power and Identity
1(24)
Chiefdoms as Political Societies
1(1)
Chiefs
2(1)
Chieftaincies
3(1)
Chiefdoms
3(1)
Chiefly Confederacies
4(1)
The Use of Ethnographies
4(2)
Pacific Island Chiefdoms
6(5)
Tikopia
8(1)
The Marquesas
9(2)
African Continental Chiefdoms
11(4)
The Nuer
12(1)
The Turu
13(1)
The Swazi
14(1)
Southeast Asian Chiefdoms
15(2)
The Kachin
16(1)
Circum-Caribbean Chiefdoms
17(3)
Historical Chiefdoms of Panama
20(1)
The Bottom Line
20(1)
Additional Readings
20(5)
2 Evolutionary Theory Integrating Anthropology
25(22)
Evolution
25(2)
Emerging Ideas of Evolution
26(1)
Evolution, Anthropology, and Racism
27(1)
Nineteenth Century Sociocultural Evolution
27(3)
Herbert Spencer
28(1)
Morgan, Marx, and Engels
29(1)
Spencer versus Marx: Foundations of Social Evolutionary Thought
30(1)
Twentieth Century American Relativism as a Historical Science
30(3)
Franz Boas
31(2)
Twentieth Century British Structural Functionalism as a Historical Science
33(1)
Cultural Ecology and Functionalism
34(3)
White and Steward
35(1)
Steward's Intellectual Successors
36(1)
Problems with Models of Social Evolution Based on Ethnography
37(1)
Functionalism and the New Archaeology
37(3)
Cultural Ecology and Archaeology
38(1)
The New Archaeology
38(2)
Processual Archaeology and Political Economy
40(2)
The Michigan School of Political Archaeology
40(2)
Postmodernist Critique and Processualism Plus
42(2)
Ian Hodder and the Cambridge School of Archaeology
42(1)
Elizabeth Brumfiel at a Turning Point
43(1)
The Bottom Line
44(1)
Additional Readings
44(3)
3 Chiefdoms and Sociocultural Evolution
47(20)
Archaeological Investigations of Chiefdoms
47(5)
Settlement Hierarchies
48(1)
Economic Inequality
49(2)
Monument Construction
51(1)
Warfare
51(1)
Top-Down Approaches: Power to the Chiefs
52(4)
Controlling Economic Flows
52(2)
Warfare and Religious Ideology
54(1)
Power Strategies
54(2)
Bottom-Up Approaches: Power to the People
56(3)
Anarchism
56(1)
House Society
57(1)
Collective Action Theory
57(1)
"Moral Economy"
58(1)
Summary
58(1)
Tributary Modes of Production: Financing Chiefly Institutions of Power
59(3)
Ritual Mode of Production
60(1)
Corporate Mode of Production
61(1)
Asiatic Mode of Production
61(1)
Predatory Mode of Production
61(1)
The Bottom Line
62(1)
Additional Readings
62(5)
4 Ritual Mode of Production Based on Religious Ideology
67(22)
The Ritual Economy
67(3)
Low-Density Societies with Monuments
68(1)
Organizing Regional Populations
68(1)
Monumentality Expressing Power
69(1)
Monument Landscapes: Neolithic Scandinavia (4000--3300 BCE)
70(7)
Ritual and Ceremonial Structures
70(2)
Almhov (4000--3700 BCE)
72(1)
Doserygg (3900--3300 BCE)
73(2)
Sarup (3400--3200 BCE)
75(2)
Social Labor in Early Neolithic Monuments
77(3)
Almhov
78(1)
Doserygg
78(1)
Sarup
79(1)
Summary
79(1)
Monument Landscapes: Eastern North America
80(5)
Foraging Societies with Monument Landscapes
80(1)
Hopewellian Societies
81(3)
Mississippian Societies
84(1)
The Bottom Line
85(1)
Additional Readings
85(4)
5 Corporate Mode of Production and Defense of Land
89(22)
Warfare
89(3)
Defensive Works
90(2)
Hillfort Chiefdoms of Highland Peru
92(1)
Wanka II Chiefdoms: Ethnohistory
93(1)
Wanka II Chiefdoms: Regional Settlement Hierarchies and Socioeconomic Integration
94(6)
The Subsistence Economy
96(1)
The Craft Economy
97(2)
Summary
99(1)
Wanka II: Organization of Individual Settlements
100(3)
Tunanmarca
100(2)
Umpamalca
102(1)
Chawin
103(1)
Wanka II: Settlement Plans
103(1)
Wanka III: The House
104(3)
Status Distinction in Houses
106(1)
The Bottom Line
107(1)
Additional Readings
108(3)
6 Asiatic Mode of Production: Engineered Landscapes
111(20)
Ownership of Engineered Landscapes: The Bottleneck
111(5)
Processual Aproaches to Engineered Landscapes
113(1)
Middle Eastern Irrigation-Based Chiefdoms
113(3)
Hawaiian Island Complex Chiefdom-States
116(11)
Hawaiian Ethnohistory
116(2)
Hawaiian Domestic Economy
118(1)
Hawaiian Surplus Mobilization
119(3)
Hawaiian Archaeology
122(1)
Hawaiian Phases of Social Development
122(2)
Engineered Landscapes at Time of First Contact
124(2)
Auxiliary Ideological Power on the Hawaiian Islands
126(1)
The Bottom Line
127(1)
Additional Readings
128(3)
7 Predatory Mode of Production and Wealth Finance
131(24)
Control of Wealth Flows
131(2)
Scandinavian Chiefdoms of the Viking and Bronze Ages
133(11)
The Viking Age: Historic Overview
133(3)
The Early Bronze Age of Scandinavia: Archaeological Evidence
136(2)
The Early Bronze Age of the South: Thy, Denmark
138(4)
The Early Bronze Age of the North: Tanum, Sweden
142(2)
The Maritime Sector
144(1)
Modeling Chiefly Confederacies in Bronze Age Scandinavia
144(3)
Surplus Production and Investment
145(1)
Labor Organization of Farms and Ships
145(1)
Metal Wealth
145(1)
Exports of Amber and Slaves
146(1)
Predatory Modes in Comparative Perspective
147(3)
Southeast Asia
148(1)
The Pacific
148(1)
Desert and Steppe Chiefdoms of the Old World
149(1)
The Bottom Line
150(1)
Additional Readings
151(4)
8 Models for Archaeological Research on Chiefdoms
155(10)
Chiefdoms: Archaeology's Exceptional Opportunity
155(1)
Four Modes of Production in Chiefdoms
156(3)
Ritual Mode of Production
156(1)
Corporate Mode of Production
157(1)
Asiatic Mode of Production
158(1)
Predatory Mode of Production
158(1)
Modalities as Processual Models of the Political Economy
159(1)
Coda: Where Have All the Chiefs Gone?
160(3)
Failed States or Successful Chiefdoms?
161(1)
Taming Chiefs in Modern States
162(1)
Additional Readings
163(2)
Project 165(2)
References 167
Timothy Earle is Professor Emeritus at Northwestern University. He has conducted major archaeological field projects in Hawaii, Peru, Argentina, Denmark and Hungary; he believes that anthropological archaeology is a potent tool for investigating history in ways directly relevant to the modern world. His books on political economy include How Chiefs Come to Power and Bronze Age Economics.